Frank Sinatra – Everything Happens to Me

 
EVERYTHING HAPPENS to ME
 
 
 
This is one of my all-time favorite of the many great albums by The Chairman of The Board, Mr. Francis Albert Sinatra. My good friend Jimmy Starace gave this to me for a Birthday present one year and I’ve loved this wonderful Sinatra Album ever since. The album comprises songs that were Frank Sinatra’s best loved songs. His daughter Tina had the idea of producing album of songs that her father Frank Sinatra recorded that were his own personal favorites. Tina asked her father to pick these songs, and the album Everything Happens to Me was born. If you’ve never listed to the album and I’m sure you’ll agree that this collection of Mr. Sinatra singing his favorite songs is a beautiful and poignant one.
This is one of the most interesting and successful Frank Sinatra collections out there. Everything Happens to Me avoids the obvious hits and collects a number of the finest ballads and torch songs that Sinatra cut while at Reprise Records during the ’60s, ’70s, and early ’80s. It’s a regal collection that concentrates on the darker side of Sinatra‘s art. Instead of celebrating a cross section of the Voice’s career the way that so many compilations do, the album sounds like an elegy and has a strange cohesiveness considering that it’s drawn up from material that stretches over a 20-year period. Sinatra had recorded the title track numerous times throughout his career, but the previously unreleased version included here (complete with new lyrics) is his darkest and most battle-scarred interpretation. Even considering its lighter moments (“The Second Time Around” and the lyrically downbeat but wondrously swinging “Summer Wind”), this is a stark collection that almost plays like an original concept album about confronting disappointment, loneliness, and ultimately, mortality. That’s a lot to ask casual fans to embrace, but Everything Happens to Me ends up giving listeners who only know of the swinging Rat Packer more than a glimpse of the complexity and depth behind Frank Sinatra‘s art.
 
 
 
 
 
 
FRANK
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

EVERYTHING HAPPENS to ME
 
 
The TITLE SONG of The Album of The Same Name
 
 
This Collections of SONGS were FRANK SINATRA’S 
 
FAVORITE SONGS THAT HE RECORDED
 
Learn How to Make
 
SUNDAYS SAUCE alla SINATRA
 
alla BELLINO
 
The RECIPE Is In SUNDAY SAUCE 
 
by DANIEL BELLINO “Z”
 
 
A FELLOW SICILIAN-AMERICAN of FRANK SINATRA ‘S
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Frank Sinatra The Main Event – Madison Square Garden New York

FRANK SINATRA
The MAIN EVENT
MADISON SQUARE GARDEN
LIVE
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FRANK SINATRA
The MAIN EVENT
 
The OVERTURE
Introduction by HOWARD COSELL
October 13th 1974
Madison Square Garden
NEW YORK
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Francis Albert Sinatra
Live at MADISON SQUARE GARDEN
“The MAIN EVENT”
Broadcast Live October 13, 1974
LADY is a TRAMP
Cole Porter’s “I GET a KICK OUT of YOU”
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Sinatra: The Main Event was an ABC musical television special starring Frank Sinatrabroadcast on October 13, 1974. The special documents a concert given by Sinatra at Madison Square Garden in New York City, in which Sinatra is accompanied by the Woody Herman band, and introduced by Howard Cosell.
The concert that was broadcast, was the last of a series of six that Sinatra gave at Madison Square Garden in October 1974, the audio from the concerts had also been taped and the highlights would be released as The Main Event – Live. The saxophonist Jerry Doidgson who performed on the concerts felt that the televised performance wasn’t as strong as the others as Sinatra’s natural pacing of the concert was disrupted by the mechanisms of television production.





“We Will Now Do The National Anthem”
 
“But You Needn’t Rise”

Frank Sinatra
MY WAY
The MAIN EVENT
Madison Square Garden New York
NEW YORK
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SINATRA SAUCE
 
COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK
 
HIS FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
“FRANK”

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Learn How to Make
SUNDAY SAUCE GRAVY
alla SINATRA
Dolly Sinatra’s Marinara
and More …
RECIPES in SUNDAY SAUCE
by Daniel Bellino “Z”
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Frank Sinatra – The World We Knew

 

FRANCIS ALBERT SINATRA



Frank Sinatra

“The WORLD We KNEW”

The World We Knew (Over and Over)” is a song recorded by Frank Sinatra in 1967. It is based on a composition by Bert Kaempfert, a German musician and composer.

The song first appeared on Sinatra’s 1967 album The World We Knew and was released as a single later that year. “The World We Knew (Over and Over)” peaked at number thirty on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in September 1967.  On the Billboard easy listening chart, it spent five weeks at number one, and was Sinatra’s sixth and final single to top that chart.

Charles Aznavour translated the song into French under the title “Un monde avec toi” for Paul Mauriat and Mireille Mathieu . The song was also translated into Italian by Fred Bongusto under the title “Ore D’Amore”. Josh Groban covered the song on his album Harmony.









SINATRA SAUCE

The COOKBOOK

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN FOOD RECIPES

And MORE  ….




Sinatra at Jillys – New York City

 

SINATRA at JILLY’S

FINE ART PRINT

From FINE ART AMERICA


Frank Sinatra having Dinner with his Daughters Tina & Nancy Sinatra, and Friends.

JILLY’S NEW YORK






PJ CLARKE’S

One of FRANK SINATRA’S FAVORITES

FINE ART PRINTS From FINE ART AMERICA

Artist – BELLINO

SINATRA SAUCE

The COOKBOOK

COOK & EAT LIKE FRANK

His FAVORITE ITALIAN RECIPES

JILLY’S


Ermenegildo ‘Jilly’ Rizzo was an American restaurateur, entertainer and a long-time friend of Frank Sinatra.

Born in 1917 in the Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood of New York, Rizzo first worked for his father delivering ice to cafes and had a variety of other restaurant jobs before opening his eponymous saloon.

Jilly’s, located in midtown Manhattan, became known as the city’s swinging-est place to be. Sinatra frequented his old pal’s place often and brought along friends like the famous American bandleader and composer Count Basie.

As you can see from the menu, the food was standard stuff – people came for the atmosphere and the hope of bumping into America’s favorite crooner and his glamorous buddies.

Rizzo later became one of Sinatra’s chief aides and closest confidantes and was referenced in the song Mrs Robinson, featured in Sinatra’s 1969 album My Way. ‘And here’s to you, Mrs Robinson, Jilly loves you more than you will know…’

Rizzo was also a frequent guest on the comedy show Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In, delivering one-liners in his monotone New York accent.

Sinatra, who was based in California, persuaded Jilly to open another establishment there in the late 1980s.

Rizzo died at the age of 75 in Rancho Mirage, CA, in 1992, when his car was struck by a drunk driver. According to reports at the time, Sinatra went into seclusion on news of the death of his old friend. He died in 1998.


FRANK SINATRA HOLDS COURT

JILLY’S NEW YORK


The MENU

JILLY’S

NEW YORK

WHERE FRANK SINATRA HELF COURT


MENU

APPETIZERS & GOODIES

“JILLY’S”

Circa 1970s





APPEtIZERS & GOODIES

FANTAIL SHRIMP $6.75
BABY BACK RIBS $3.50
EGG ROLL. $2.25
ROAST PORK. $4.00
CHICKEN SANDWICH  $3.25
STEAK SANDWICH. $7.00
CHOW MEIN. $3.50
SHRIMP CHOW MEIN $5.00

SUGGESTIONS For DINNER

CHICKEN CHOW MEIN. $3.50
SHRIMPS with LOBSTER SAUCE  $6.00
BEEF with OYSTER SAUCE.  $5.00
STEAK KEW.  $8.00
WILDEST FRIED RICE. $3.50
MOO GOO GAI PAN $4.50 
STEAK with SALAD. $8.50





FRANK & FRIENDS
At JILLY’S
NEW YORK CITY





JILLY’S


Many know that Jilly’s was favourite New York Bar. Owned by Frank Sinatra close friend Jilly Rizzo. Most would be surprised to know that the restaurant served Chinese Food. Frank loved Jilly’s and held court there any time he was in New York.

When Frank arrived, he would yell down to the Chinese Cook, making some kind of remark to pull the cooks buttons. The cook would yell back in broken English “Fuckk You Frank” !!! Sinatra loved it and would start laughing. This is how Sinatra always started a night out at Jilly’s, getting a little chuckle. Of course Frank would leave the cook a huge tip.